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Chemical communication in cucujid grain beetles
Authors:A C Oehlschlager  A M Pierce  H D Pierce Jr  J H Borden
Affiliation:(1) Department of Chemistry, Simon Fraser University, V5A 1S6 Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada;(2) Centre for Pest Management Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, V5A 1S6 Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
Abstract:Males of five sympatric species of economically damaging cucujid grain beetles,Cryptolestes ferrugineus (Stephens),C. pusillus (Schönhen),C. turcicus (Grouvelle),Oryzaephilus mercator (Fauvel), andO. surinamensis (L.), produce macrolide aggregation pheromones especially in the presence of food. Work leading to the isolation, identification, and establishment of biological activity of these semiochemicals is reviewed. The trivial name ldquocucujoliderdquo is proposed and used to identify these compounds that are characteristic of the Cucujidae. The twoOryzaephilus share species share a common cucujolide pheromone, whileCryptolestes species use cucujolides that are either enantiomeric, unique to the genus, or released in trace quantities byOryzaephilus spp. and not used as pheromones by the latter species. The major mechanisms for species specificity in chemical communication are: (1) presence of a unique pheromone (C. ferrugineus andC. pusillus); (2) use of pheromones that are inactive alone but synergize response to cucujolides unique to a species (C. pusillus, C. turcicus, andO. surinamensis); (3) response to only one enantiomer of a pheromone (C. ferrugineus, O. surinamensis, andO. mercator); and (4) synergism between enantiomers of a pheromone (C. turcicus). The only species for which cross-attraction was evident wasO. mercator toO. surinamensis. Both sexes ofOryzaephilus spp. produce (R)-1-octen-3-ol, which highly synergizes response to the cucujolide pheromones. Similar synergism occurs between hexanal, octanal, and nonanal and the cucujolide pheromones ofOryzaephilus spp. The males of a sixth cucujid species,Cathartus quadricollis (Guér) produce a different aggregation pheromone, (3R,6E)-7-methyl-6-nonen-3-yl acetate. Trapping ofCryptolestes andOryzaephilus spp. in cardboard traps baited with pheromones is efficient in environments mimicking food-storage areas. Pheromone-baited plastic probe traps are the most efficient at capturing these species in infested grain.Coleoptera: Cucujidae.Presented at the 194th American Chemical Society National Meeting in the Symposium on Insect Chemical Communication: Unifying Concepts (Burdick & Jackson International Award in Pesticide Chemistry honoring Dr. James H. Tumlinson), New Orleans, Louisiana, August 30–September 4, 1987.Research supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Strategic Grant No. G1039 and Operating Grants Nos. A3881 and A3706.
Keywords:Grain beetles  Coleoptera  Cucujidae  Cathartus quadricollis  Cryptolestes ferrugineus  C  pusillus  C  turcicus  Oryzaephilus mercator  O  surinamensis  macrolide aggregation pheromone
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